Andy’s Final Empanada Run

Andy’s Final Run, originally uploaded by bill kralovec.

Pictured above is my brother Andy at Empanadas La Negra. He left yesterday afternoon for the USA, but before he said goodbye to Venezuela, he had to get a final “empanada.” The empanada is a popular Venezuelan breakfast food. It is not as popular as the “arepa” which is unique to Venezuela.

The empanada is in the shape of a half circle. It is a corn flour dough wrapped around a variety of fillings. At this particular place, there are 16 different types of fillings. Andy’s favorites are chicken and ham & cheese. There are also meat, fish, spinach, etc. The delicious aspect of the empanada and the reason they are so popular with Venezuelans is they are deep fried in oil. They are a cholesterol raiser! In fresh empanadas, the bag which they are placed, is soaked in excess oil from the flour.

Empanadas La Negra is named after the head chef, “La Negra.” She is a Venezuelan of African descent that is proud of her shop. It is located near the entrance road to the school on the main highway leading out of Anaco. It is a five minute walk from Andy’s house and many mornings he would visit for his daily dosis of grease. The restaurant is very popular with Venezuelans working in the area. There are always oil field workers dressed in their company’s jump suits inside. To accompany an empanada, La Negra offers coffee, soda pop, or malta.

Andy is quite popular wtih the serving ladies. The woman above asked Andy to take her to the USA with him. Andy politely refused the offer, but gave her a big hug and a smile, before he headed out the door with his greasy bag of empanadas.

EA Daily Bulletin: Tuesday June 3, 2008

The office will be open today from 8:00 AM – 3:00 PM to the public.

Monday’s Accomplishments: We cleaned and organized the storage room #19 on the second floor. With increasing enrollment, we can convert one of the storage rooms to a classroom. In years past, the rooms were used as secondary classrooms. They are located above the art studio. We also checked out all of the expatriate teachers. In office news, we determined the Apostille process for students wanting to enter the Venezuelan school system, organized transport for the expat teachers to the airport, and sorted out keys and pay roll for June and July.

Expatriates Leave EA: The bus arrived on time this morning to take the outgoing expatriate teachers and their luggage to the Barcelona airport.

Summer School: Ms. Doreen, Ms. Lisa, and Ms. Ann will be holding summer tutoring sessions at the school during the month of June. This is good for the students to maintain their level of English during the long summer holiday. We encourage our families to use as much English as possible, and some ideas would be to watch English television programs and internet videos, read English magazines and books, etc. If you are interested in having your child come in for the summer, please contact the office and we’ll put you in touch with one of the three ladies.

I will be out of the office after 1:00 PM this afternoon.

The Community Says Goodbye to Expat Staff

EA Despedida May 31, 2008, originally uploaded by bill kralovec.

This past Saturday evening, the parents surprised the outgoing expatriate faculty with a grand farewell party. They wanted to show their appreciation for the staff’s dedication to their children. It was a very special evening for me. The parents went to great lengths to express their gratitude. They had Jay’s mega-BBQ truck and plenty of delicious food and drink. There were many speeches, tears, gifts, and thank yous for each staff member.

Shown above is the mariachi band and you can hear a bit from their set. There was much dancing and merriment long into the evening. They had a karaoke machine and the crowd was so uplifted of my version of Frank Sinatra’s “My Way” that they got out of their seats and begged me to stop! The students had a great time running in the gym and park, and riding the bicycles around the school.

I want to thank our community on behalf of the staff. Escuela Anaco is a special place and we’ll never forget your kindness and generosity. It has been very rewarding to work with the children and parents of our community. We leave much richer for the experience!

I uploaded many photos from the evening. You can see all of them in my flickr.com account.

Congratulations Evan!

Me, originally uploaded by Vitharr.

Pictured above is former EA student, Evan Huff. Evan left the school after the first semester in January of this year. He graduated this weekend from a Tulsa, Oklahoma area school.

Congratulations! We missed you this year and wish you the best of luck next year. Evan was accepted to a “folk school” in the country of Norway. It is post-high school program which prepares high school graduates for entry into Norwegian universities. Evan will take the year polishing his Norwegian and planning his next step. He was also accepted to several USA universities. Evan’s father Michael, was a long-time board member and supporter of the school.

EA Daily Bulletin: Monday June 2, 2008

The office will be open today from 8:00 AM – 3:00 PM for parents wishing to pick up report cards.

Happy Birthday to Anthony M. today!

Saturday’s Accomplishments: Thanks to the teachers for helping out Saturday morning. We cleaned out storage room #19 and the AV room behind the stage.

Teacher Check Out: Most of the expatriate staff will be flying out tomorrow. Before they go, they will need to have their classroom and home cleaned a secured, their mailbox cleaned, summer contact information, and the keys labeled and returned. We do a final payroll later this week.

Understanding Serbian Politics (Or At Least Trying To…)

Hvala from Boris Tadic, originally uploaded by bill kralovec.

The past month I have been following Serbian politics on Blic, B92, and various blogs trying to make some sense of it. This post is my current understanding of it and I am sure it will change as I learn more, especially when I move to Belgrade in July.

On May 13, 2008, the country held parliamentary elections. In order to form a government, a political party needs to have 126 of the 250 seats (over 50%) of the seats in parliament. No single party won that many, so coalitions are forming among parties to try to get to the 126 necessary seats. The big issues in this election are defining the relationship of Serbia with the European Union (EU) and the country’s reaction to the Kosovo declaration of independence.

It looks like the winning side won by a touchdown, as the SRS-DSS-NS-SPS-JS-PUPS coalition won 128 seats vs. the losing side, DS-LDP-Minority Parties coalition won 122 seats.

Those acronyms are the political parties with candidates running for parliamentary seats. Even though there are lots of different parties, they seem to fall in one of two philosophical camps. Being an American, I am thinking of it as “red state” versus “blue state” dichotomy. In the US, the higher income, more diverse states like California, New York, and my home state of Michigan, vote liberal, democratic, while the red states vote conservative, republican party. In terms of population, it is about 50/50 for each side which happened this election in Serbia.

The Serbian “Blue State” people would support the Pro-EU bloc. This is the philosophy that Serbia needs to be part of the European Union to improve its economy and the well-being of its citizens. This is also the side that seems less bothered about losing a big part of their country (Kosovo). The “Blue Team” consists of mainly the Democratic Party (DS), which had the single most votes of any single party. They won 39% or 102 seats. They state they want EU integration and to “defend Kosovo,” which I am a little unclear on, but more on that later. The DS is the party of current Serbian President Boris Tadic and a thank you message from his web site is featured above. He believes in a free market economy and is very pro-EU. He has been pushing for further EU integration and signed a controversial agreement with the EU for a road map for Serbian membership. There are two other “blue state” parties in Serbia. The Liberal Democratic Party (LDP-it helps to memorize them to keep everyone straight) won 13 seats (5%) and they are the only party to support an independent Kosovo. The final “blue state” party is a coalition of minorities in Serbia. The minority parties are as follows:

– The Bosniak List for European Sandzak – 2 seats 1% These are the Muslims in the Sandzak region.

– The Hungarian Coalition – 4 seats 2% (must be in the Vojvodina region)

– The Coalition of Albanians of the Presevo Valley 1 seat

That gives a total of 122 seats for the pro EU or blue side. I am not sure if they ever tried to form a coalition or not.

The “Red States” of Serbia are the Radical Bloc. They believe that Serbia was humiliated with the loss of Kosovo. They also seem to lean more to Russia than that the EU although they have not clearly defined what they want to do about Kosovo or about EU membership. The red or radical bloc is led by Serb Radical Party (SRS) that won the second most seats of a single party at 78 seats (29%). They are “ultra-nationalist” and the president of the party is currently in the Hague on trial for war crimes.

The other “red” party is the Democratic Party of Serbia coalition with the New Serbia party (DSS-NS). They won 30 seats (12%) in the May parliament election. They are the sworn enemies of the DS. The red states or radical bloc had a total of 108 seats, not enough to form a government.

Outside of the Red State vs. Blue State paradigm is the ultimate in political acronyms. They are the independent bloc and are a coalition of several socialist parties. The first is the Serbian Socialist Party (SPS) that was founded by Slobodan Milosevic. They won 20 seats (8%). They formed a coalition with United Serbia (JS) and the Associated Pensioners Party (PUPS). That would make this bloc the SPS-JS-PUPS. The interesting point is that the coalition won 20 seats (8%). They would make the difference.

If the Pro-EU bloc could get them to form a government with them, that would mean they would have a total of 142 seats. If the Radical bloc could woo them to their side, they would have 128 seats, two more than the necessary 126 seats. The socialists held talks with both sides, and recently decided to go with the radicals. They seem to have a philosophy more in line with them. The details will be hashed out next week.

What does this all mean for Serbia? There is much speculation, but most commentators think it will be doom and gloom for the Serbian people, as William Montgomery write:

“The new government, probably with the Socialists in the lead, will undo some of the market-driven changes put in over the past seven years. Moreover, they will use the 10 billion euro foreign currency reserves to finance infrastructure projects, probably raise pension payments, and pay the cost of subsidies in order to demonstrate that their policies are better for Serbia. Western foreign investment will dry up in the face of the economic policy changes and the raised political risk of investment in Serbia.

Two or three years (at most) down the road, Serbians will find that inflation is far higher; the dinar far less stable and decreasing in value; and foreign currency reserves far lower. The situation will only continue to deteriorate from then on. The thought that Russian investors will offset all of the above flies in the face of reality. Other than a few high-profile projects, such as the acquisition of NIS in a “sweetheart deal,” high-quality investment that actually helps to build the Serbian economy will be very rare indeed.”

Or as Jonathon Davis writes,

“At worst we could see a unified Nationalist bloc with a tiny parliamentary majority drag a liberalising and increasingly European orientated Serbia into the Russian fold and return the country to the isolation and pariah status that it suffered in the 1990s.”

I really can’t state an opinion because I am still learning about the situation.

Yearbooks Are Ready For Ordering

Guacamaya Yearbook Order, originally uploaded by bill kralovec.

Above is the screen shot from http://www.blurb.com, the internet professional book publishing web site. If you want to order a copy of this year’s Guacamaya Yearbook, you can search their book store. Type in Escuela Anaco and you will get this screen. The cover photo was taken by first grade teacher Alejandra Chavez, and it features one of our beautiful sunsets over the campus.

Some of the photos may be a bit blurry due to low image quality. This was the first time we used this service, and we had some glitches to work out. Most of the photos seem fine however, and it is an inexpensive keepsake for the school year.

EA Daily Bulletin: Saturday May 31, 2008

Regular classes are completed. Today is a work day as the expatriate teachers are cleaning their rooms and checking out. The office will be open today for parents.

BBQ: There will be a community party tonight around sunset at the school. The parents want to thank the staff for their contributions throughout the years. See Wadad and Raquel for more information.

Student Awards: We held our annual awards ceremony yesterday. The awards reflect our mission. We reward those characteristics and habits that we try to instill in our students. The 2007-2008 awards were as follows:

Accelerated Reader

1. Isaac B. 2. Clint T. 3. Maria Jose G. 4. Fabio M. 5. Salvatore T Honorable Mention: Carlos Ch.

Attendance (Perfect Attendance) – Steven E. (Outstanding Attendance) – Owen K., Arianna M., Carlos Ch.

Improved English – Jorge Antonio, Anthony M. (Grade 4) , Dean M.

Best Athletes – elementary Jorge Antonio, secondary Diego S.

Citizenship/Community Service- Michael & Brandon C.

Spanish – Maria Jose G., Fabio M., Katheren M.

Art – Maria Jose / Arianna / Kary L. / Audrey G. / Lilibeth S.

Top Students –

Kinder- Valeria R. / Joaquin B.

1 – Sebastian G. / Enzo O.

2 – Sarah J.

3 – Maria Jose G.

4 – Salvatore T.

5 – Isaac B.

6- Fabrizio M.

9/10 – Lilibeth S.

Director’s Award for Embodying EA Values: Katheren M.

Farewell Ceremony: It was the most tears I have seen ever at the school. Students, teachers, and parents were all crying. We bid farewell to the following students and teachers:

  • Bill, Nadia, Ocean, Owen & Oliver Kralovec (Serbia)
  • Isaac Bonilla (Mexico)
  • Joaquin Bonilla (Colombia)
  • Shaun & Susan Fitzpatrick (Colorado, USA)
  • Sherri Moore (Canada)
  • William Flinn (Iowa)
  • Andy Kralovec (Michigan)
  • Odalys Olchowy (Mexico)
  • Cesar Salazar (San Mateo)
  • Alejandra & Sebastian Chavez-Wells (Bahrain)

The tears are a testament to the work we do here.

EA Students, Teachers, and Parents Visit Casa Hogar

casa hogar1, originally uploaded by bill kralovec.

This past Wednesday members of the EA community delivered the donations to Casa Hogar Nazereth. This is an orphanage on the south side of the city. Ms. Moore, the fourth grade teacher, organized a food and clothing drive for the end of the year. They are pictured above with some of the orphans.

This has been a successful project for our community service program. Our students have learned valuable lessons! Many of our students will be the future leaders of Venezuela. They have to understand that the needs of the poor of the country have not been addressed throughout the history of Venezuela. The majority of Venezuelans are poor which is a shame in such an oil rich nation. EA is doing our part in helping them. A big thank you to Sherri, Jamie, and Sandra for assisting with the donations.

EA Daily Bulletin: Friday May 30, 2008

Today is a “B” day.

Awards Ceremony & Despedida: We’ll begin around 10:30 AM for the Awards Ceremony and our good byes. Teachers and students are asked to report to the assembly area at that time. Before then, classes will be cleaning the rooms, etc.

Report Cards: We will try to issue the fourth quarter report cards after the 11:30 AM dismissal. If they are not completed, they will be available for pick up all next week. Teachers with spare time this morning are asked to come to the office to assist with printing and photocopying.

Staff Party: We’ll have our annual staff party after the 11:30 AM dismissal. Expect festivities to begin around noon.

Education News & Research: The USA National Scripp’s Spelling Bee Finals begins today in Washington DC. Education Week has an article here on the strategies of two rivals. Associated Press also has a nice article here. The Eastern Venezuelan Athletic Conference will be having a Spelling Bee next year.